Marquez's riding today was over aggressive...too many mistakes while being way too fast! But...people and specially Rossi have short memories...!
https://www.instagram.com/p/BhUiO9RFMnQ/
Race control needs to accept responsibility for that shambles..NathanOlder wrote: ↑09 Apr 2018, 00:42Marquez now needs to learn the hard way. He needs a ban. He does what he wants time and time again. Stalled on the grid, bump started it (illegal) , turned around are drove the bike in opposite direction (illegal) , retook his original place then started on the grid (illegal). Drove through Aleix Esp (illegal) . Drove Rossi off the track (illegal) .
In the end he lost a 5th place (about 12 pts)
A joke.
Miller with Slicks on Pole, everyone else on rain tyres.
I agree mostly with you, except that he should not have gone to Rossi's box for apologising. Not immediately anyway; you can figure everyone there was still very furious about Marquez. He should have stuck to a public apology first and the day after try to approach Rossi one way or another.J.A.W. wrote: ↑09 Apr 2018, 03:30Race control needs to accept responsibility for that shambles..NathanOlder wrote: ↑09 Apr 2018, 00:42Marquez now needs to learn the hard way. He needs a ban. He does what he wants time and time again. Stalled on the grid, bump started it (illegal) , turned around are drove the bike in opposite direction (illegal) , retook his original place then started on the grid (illegal). Drove through Aleix Esp (illegal) . Drove Rossi off the track (illegal) .
In the end he lost a 5th place (about 12 pts)
A joke.
Clearly it was a case of maladministration - giving a rampant M.M. ( he was easily the quickest on track)
a ride-through penalty - so the utterly predictable result - was always going to be a 'bull-in-a china-shop'
scenario..
The string of needless dramas which resulted, ought to have been avoided by a post-race 30 sec penalty
for the grid infringement, which in the circumstances, would still have likely been a race win for M.M...
As for Rossi, he missed the opportunity to tell Marquez, the apropos words Stoner had given him,
(after Stoner had been punted off by Rossi).. "Your ambition outweighed your talent".
At least Marquez showed he was man enough to go & apologise,( before being rudely rebuffed by Rossi's man),
whereas Stoner had to seek out Rossi, in his camp..
Thanks, read a bit about that later on, but still what confuses me is that this rule is for riders changing bikes after sighting lap, but with Quick Restart there was another sighting lap and then the actual warm up laprscsr wrote: ↑09 Apr 2018, 07:25Miller with Slicks on Pole, everyone else on rain tyres.
Everyone on rain tyres decided they also want to use slick, because the track was drying fast. Therefore they would have to start from the pitlane. Something similar happened on the Sachsenring and the race control didn't want that to happen again.
Therefore they decided to put everyone (except Miller) to the back of the field. This meant that the field was about 5 rows behind Miller. (if they would have had more starting boxes, they would have put them even further back)
At the start Marquez's engine stalled, he bump started it (which is actually quite impressive) and he rode back to his starting position. He got a ride through for that afterwards.
And Miller obviously led into the first corner.
turbof1 wrote: ↑09 Apr 2018, 08:29I agree mostly with you, except that he should not have gone to Rossi's box for apologising.J.A.W. wrote: ↑09 Apr 2018, 03:30
As for Rossi, he missed the opportunity to tell Marquez, the apropos words Stoner had given him,
(after Stoner had been punted off by Rossi).. "Your ambition outweighed your talent".
At least Marquez showed he was man enough to go & apologise,( before being rudely rebuffed by Rossi's man),
whereas Stoner had to seek out Rossi, in his camp..
Not immediately anyway; you can figure everyone there was still very furious about Marquez. He should have stuck to a public apology first and the day after try to approach Rossi one way or another.
He did also claim his actions "were not crazy"... . Somehow I don't see all too much regret from Marquez.
how can you blame the race control? Only Marquez is to be blamed for his actions. He broke the rules several times. And every penalty has been quite correct. Especially after he got penalized for crashing into Espargaro, you should expect any rider to not repeat that foul action.J.A.W. wrote: ↑09 Apr 2018, 11:24turbof1 wrote: ↑09 Apr 2018, 08:29I agree mostly with you, except that he should not have gone to Rossi's box for apologising.J.A.W. wrote: ↑09 Apr 2018, 03:30
As for Rossi, he missed the opportunity to tell Marquez, the apropos words Stoner had given him,
(after Stoner had been punted off by Rossi).. "Your ambition outweighed your talent".
At least Marquez showed he was man enough to go & apologise,( before being rudely rebuffed by Rossi's man),
whereas Stoner had to seek out Rossi, in his camp..
Not immediately anyway; you can figure everyone there was still very furious about Marquez. He should have stuck to a public apology first and the day after try to approach Rossi one way or another.
He did also claim his actions "were not crazy"... . Somehow I don't see all too much regret from Marquez.
I agree with M.M., his riding was "not crazy" - he simply had the 'bit between his teeth', & was going
'hard out', & felt frustrated by the 'mobile chicanes' who were blocking his progress.
Now, of course - this is M.M. in 'full race mode', & IMO, race control really has to take the blame for
'unleashing the beast', since they'd effectively 'goaded' him into a 'red mist/frenzy'. All predictable.
Rossi cannot realistically claim to be the offended party either, not with his long track record in typical/smirking denial of responsibility - for pulling similar stunts so often, down the years..
Congrats to Cal on taking the win, & being the 1st Englander in ~40 years to gain a points lead in the premier class, good effort.
I agree. Rossi did worse in 2015 Malaysia GP that warranted a black flag, but that did not happen. There wasn't even a penalty for deliberately putting a driver off the race! So why is this an issue now?AMG.Tzan wrote: ↑09 Apr 2018, 12:46And why on earth is everyone only speaking about the Rossi-Marquez clash?? Zarco also hit pedrosa and because of that pedrosa crashed! Yet no penalty for Zarco! But that's what happens when 80% of the MotoGP fans are Rossi fans...and Rossi gives them food for anger against other riders! Marquez was just racing hard there...over the edge yes...but not crashing others out on purpose...that's just silly Rossi media reactions! Get on top of it and don't have short memories...!
That's the first thing I thought of, I'm surprised Rossi forgot about it
You are right. Pedrosa falled in the same way. Marquez was punished and thats all. No need to make it bigger than what it is. Other riders also made this kind of mistakes. Yes Marquez made more of them because he made more overtake actions. He must act more relaxed of course. I think he must take it easy and must be finish race after Dovi overtake.Andres125sx wrote: ↑10 Apr 2018, 11:52Id like to clarify it was Marc fault on all scenarios, but I dont think it was intentional, so Rossi should have accepted Marquez apologies and shouldnt have rant so loud.
Marc received several deserved penalties because of his mistakes and thats all, move on